Passion vs. Commitment: Which is the key ingredient to successful organizing?

Passion is contagious. When we walk into a room and see an individual speak about any issue with genuine enthusiasm and authenticity, they can be so powerful that we feel ourselves rise to our feet in applause. For many of us, it was the passion of an individual that first brought us into social justice movements.

While passion may be the motivator for involvement, it is difficult to sustain through trials and tribulations endured when organizing a community. Results don’t come together as quickly as we’d like, volunteers don’t stay involved to help us in our efforts, and unforeseen challenges inevitably arise. Anyone who has attempted to organize their community around better addiction policies — or any other key issue — can relate to and understand these challenges. Every one of us has been there. And while our passion has gotten us into the game, it often simply cannot be sustained at all times, and especially during our most troubled moments.

A slide from day one of the Communities Project, community organizing training.
Taken during our training in Chicago August 2019

This is when the key ingredient of commitment must be blended with passion. One without the other is a formula that cannot be sustained. This is the moment when we must declare, or renew, our commitment to the greater good.

When combined, passion and commitment can produce endless results that can contribute to saving innumerable lives form substance use disorders. When our personal passion marries itself to sustained action over a substantial duration of time, the sky’s the limit.

Passion is defined as an emotion — specifically, an emotion that is barely controllable. The depth of this sentiment can be contagious, in particular when seeking to empower those who may share a similar level of passion for an issue that binds us together. As a person in long term recovery who has seen the depths of active addiction, and experienced the utmost joys of a recovery lifestyle, it’s hard to explain in words the passion I feel for recovery. But my passion is not what will contribute to helping the person who still suffers. This is the critical moment when commitment comes into play. Will I return that person’s call when I’ve missed it? Will I meet that person for coffee, at the set time and location that was predetermined — even if it’s not the most convenient? Will I actively connect that individual to others who are willing to make a similar commitment? Will I show up to be of service to that person (and others) regularly?

The difference we make for our communities lies not only in the passion we feel for bringing about change, but in the commitments we make to actively seek that change. Without the commitments, the passion simply gets lost in the complex sea of emotions in which we all exist.

The example given of helping an individual in need is no different than, say, a community whose leaders have not been proactive in combating the addiction epidemic that is taking our sisters and brothers, wives and husbands, loved ones, close friends, and neighbors. We passionately feel the need to change the policies implemented by elected leadership — but passion is not the sole ingredient to get us over the finish line.

Passion must be wed with commitment — and commitment means taking action. Passion gets us in the door — and our commitments keep us coming back. Passion gets us talking about the need for change — our commitments make that change happen.

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